Another consideration: some phrases might become awkward with spintax. For example, "being cautious" becomes Remaining vigilant cautious. But the original structure is important to maintain.
So my task is to go through the text, for each word that's not a proper noun, find three synonyms or similar words (maybe related in context, not just direct synonyms) and present them in spintax. But the user might not want just synonyms; they might want variations in meaning, but similar enough to make sense in the sentence. Also, need to ensure that the sentence structure remains valid. For example, if the original sentence is in present tense, the alternatives should respect the tense. Also, check for pluralization. For instance, if the original word is singular, the alternatives should also be singular unless the structure allows plural. Farebi yar -- HiWEBxSERIES.com
Actually, let me think of better synonyms. For "experience", possible alternatives are "journey|engagement|exploration". So my task is to go through the
Wait, "based on" is a phrasal verb; need to find three synonyms for the phrase. Hmm, but the user said "each word with 3 alternatives," so maybe split into individual words. Wait, the original instruction says "convert words as spintax w2. each word with 3 alternatives." So each word, not phrases. So if the original text is "based on," maybe split them. Wait, no. "based on" is a multi-word phrase. But according to the user's instruction, they want each word to have three alternatives. So perhaps the phrase "based on" would be converted to based on. Each alternative is a phrase? That might not fit the standard spintax. Alternatively, if split into individual words: "based" could be founded, "on" could be upon. But maybe the user expects the overall structure to stay the same, so perhaps each phrase is replaced as a whole. But the user's example shows a single-word substitution. Maybe I need to clarify, but since the user didn't specify, I'll proceed by replacing each word individually, even if it's part of a multi-word phrase, unless it's a proper noun. For example, if the original sentence is in